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To conjoin
verb
To join together; to unite; to combine.
Exact(38)
As necessary, managers will introduce new arrangements to conjoin with the core tasks.
This fear prevents sausages and buns from getting intimate, despite their urges to conjoin.
That extended meaning of connect goes far beyond the original "to conjoin, link, fasten together".
Lee's affinity to wilderness, and sensitivity to other planes, did not only bring him to these people - it enables him to conjoin what they know.
And then it has a set of combinatorial rules that apply to conjoin elements from the lexicon based only on their grammatical properties, not on their meaning.
But a few songs appear to conjoin macro with micro, with a sense of loss that encompasses disintegration on the home front and in the wider world.
Similar(22)
A Catholic nun dies giving birth to conjoined twins.
In the case of the Sotos, the family featured in your article, would they have considered giving birth to conjoined twins with any hope of a limited life span rather than sacrifice one child for the sake of the other?
Admittedly, I am prepared to go only so far in comparing The Human Centipede to conjoined twins.
The book's title story constructs a maze of worry and grief around a couple who, after a contentious struggle to conceive, give birth to conjoined twins.
Every media outlet, from CNN to The New York Times to Reuters, conjoined "Iraqi vet" to Omar Jose Gonzalez, as if his was one of those trendy multi- hyphenated names.
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